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  1. #1
    Senior Member MyAmerica's Avatar
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    Iowa immigrants suffering after raid, religious leaders say

    Iowa immigrants suffering after raid, religious leaders say

    DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -- Religious leaders and immigration reform advocates claim the human suffering caused by a raid on a Postville meatpacking plant continues and officials are ignoring the problem.

    The May 12 raid at Agriprocessors Inc., the nation's largest kosher meatpacking plant, has left dozens of women unable to work and support their children, forcing them to rely on handouts from local churches, several people said Wednesday on a conference call arranged by an immigration reform group.

    "These conditions clearly violate core human and religious values of our country," said Gideon Aronoff, CEO of the New York-based Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested 389 workers at the plant, of which about 300 pleaded guilty and were sentenced on federal charges. Most were charged with using a false identification or incorrect Social Security numbers.

    As a humanitarian gesture, authorities released arrested workers who would be the only remaining caretakers for children. Currently, 42 women and two men must remain in the small northeast Iowa town of Postville and wear ankle bracelets that allow federal officials to track their movement. Between them are 80 children.

    "It was to make sure someone was there to take care of family members," said Bob Teig, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the northern district of Iowa.

    But those parents can't work because of their immigration status, leaving them with no way to earn money to pay the rent or buy groceries. They are stuck in Postville waiting for deportation, relying solely on volunteer contributions of food and money through local churches.

    Immigration reform advocates complained that the current system relies too heavily on raids, detention, criminal prosecution and deportation.

    "This enforcement-only approach creates massive human suffering, separation of families and economic dislocation," said Aronoff, of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.

    Rev. Stephen P. Brackett, of St. Paul Lutheran Church said the raid set Postville back 15 years.

    When the plant first opened most of its workers were single immigrant men with no intention of settling in Postville. They moved to town to work at the plant just long enough to save some money, then moved on. There were frequent fights and increased crime.

    Over the years, however, more workers relocated their families to Postville and bought homes and their children enrolled in schools. Some families uprooted by the raid have lived in town for more than a decade, he said.

    The May raid occurred during the plant's first shift, which affected mostly families, Brackett said.

    Agriprocessors has turned to rapid recruitment again to fill the vacant jobs, which has meant an influx again of single immigrant men.

    "Crime is on the rise again. We've had several bar fights with new workers and at least one drug arrest," Brackett said.

    Agriprocessors, started by Aaron Rubashkin, a Hassidic Jew from New York, had been criticized after someone bought ads in Guatemala City newspapers that seek workers. The ads ran just two weeks after immigration agents arrested a third of the plant's workers -- most from Guatemala.

    Company officials have denied they had anything to do with the ads, which note an "excellent job opportunity in the United States meat processing plant in Postville, Iowa."

    Agriprocessors owns the only meatpacking plant in the town of 2,200.

    The telephone number in the ads was disconnected shortly after they ran.

    The Guatemalan Foreign Ministry said there is no temporary worker program with Iowa or any other locations in the United States. A statement from the Foreign Ministry provided to The Associated Press pointed out that the meatpacking plant is under investigation for crimes, including violating immigration laws.

    "For that reason, we cannot recommend or endorse the ads," the statement said.


    Requests seeking comment from the company about the ads and issues raised in Wednesday's conference call went unanswered.

    With the deportation of the families, Postville schools have lost half of their elementary school students, Brackett said. He said hundreds of people have left the community and many more will be deported.

    "This method of enforcement does little to deal with the problem of immigration," he said. "We desperately need to hold employers accountable rather than have undocumented workers bear the brunt of illegal immigration."

    Representatives of Jewish groups also criticized work conditions at the Postville plant that were alleged in a federal search warrant.

    "Their conditions that were documented were clearly contrary to Jewish values," said Rosalind Spigel, acting director of New York-based Jewish Labor Committee.

    After the May raid, the group asked Agriprocessors to adhere to their religious values. The group along with other Jewish organizations has asked consumers to look for alternate kosher meat products.

    Rabbi Morris Allen, who leads Beth Jacob Congregation in Mendota Heights, Minn., a conservative synagogue for more than 400 families near St. Paul, has been critical of the production practices at Agriprocessors since 2006.

    Allen, who is leading an effort to create a new kosher ethical certification called Hekhsher Tzedek, said the company could have avoided the May raids had it implemented recommendations made by him and others nearly two years ago.

    "It is clear they were aware of serious issues of health, safety, wages being shorted...all sorts of management practices and which they never made an attempt to change," he said. "Ultimately, for me as a Jew, it's not profits with an "s" that matter, it's being consistent with the voice of the prophets with a "ph" that ultimately is what's going to speak to who we are as a people."

    Aronoff, Brackett, Spigel and Allen spoke Wednesday on a telephone conference call arranged by America's Voice, an immigration reform group.

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  2. #2
    MW
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    Iowa immigrants suffering after raid, religious leaders say
    They aren't "Iowa immigrants," they're illegal aliens!

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  3. #3

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    Religious leaders and immigration reform advocates claim the human suffering caused by a raid...
    These advocates and religious leaders need to give up.

    I freed thousands of slaves; I could have freed more if they knew they were slaves.
    --Harriet Tubman

  4. #4
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Immigration reform advocates complained that the current system relies too heavily on raids, detention, criminal prosecution and deportation.

    And why shouldn't it rely on those things? Our system of justice consists of four components....arrest (raids), jail (detention), prosecution, and punishment (deportation). It is intended to hold law breakers accountable and serve as a deterent.

    Enforcement is working just as it should.

    "This enforcement-only approach creates massive human suffering, separation of families and economic dislocation," said Aronoff, of the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society.




    And just who is to blame for that? The illegals, that's who.

    These people made the choice to enter this country illegally, steal the identities of American citizens to obtain employment they are not entitled to hold here, and that is only the BEGINNING of a laundry list of crimes they committed in order to survive and function here, building their so called "better lives" at the expense of their identity theft victims.

    In the process they made the further bad decision of having children......children born for no other reason than to be USED. Used under the false impression that they are human shields against deportation and/or to escape punishment for other crimes, used for benefits, used as links in chain migration.

    They made their choice and are now suffering the consequences of their own illegal actions.

    Expect no sympathy here.





    This method of enforcement does little to deal with the problem of immigration," he said. "We desperately need to hold employers accountable rather than have undocumented workers bear the brunt of illegal immigration."


    Do these people live on this plane of reality at all? They keep repeating this same stuff, over and over again, as if by repeating it often enough will make it the truth.

    The fact of it is that enforcement IS working. The advocacy groups....which at first flatly denied it.....are now so enraged at losing ground that they are admitting that illegals are fleeing in droves. The Mexican Consulates, as well as others, are admitting it. Those within the Mexican, and other governments, are admitting it. Even the illegals themselves are admitting it.

    What more will it take for Brackett and others like him to just give it up and face the reality of it, for pete's sake?



    Agriprocessors has turned to rapid recruitment again to fill the vacant jobs, which has meant an influx again of single immigrant
    men.


    Agriprocessors, started by Aaron Rubashkin, a Hassidic Jew from New York, had been criticized after someone bought ads in Guatemala City newspapers that seek workers. The ads ran just two weeks after immigration agents arrested a third of the plant's workers -- most from Guatemala.


    I realize that the authorities are far from finished with their investigation....which is why no charges have been filed yet.....but this would seem to indicate that Agriprocessors has not yet learned it's lesson.

    Anyone who believes that they are going to suddenly revert to legal labor is seriously kidding themselves and I, for one, cannot wait until these people go down and hit hard.
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  5. #5
    Senior Member redpony353's Avatar
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    ILLEGALS COMPLAIN NO MATTER WHAT. IF THE WOMEN AND CHILDREN ARE KEPT IN DETENTION CENTERS....THEY COMPLAIN....OH THE CHILDREN....OH THE CONDITIONS. BUT IF THEY LET THEM GO PENDING A HEARING...THEN THEY ARE STARVING AND SUFFERING. THEY WONT BE HAPPY NO MATTER WHAT
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